"A Wildcat Operation in Midtown" - Art Project Takes Over Lot at Eighth Avenue and 46th Street

But to come across a pair towering over a vacant lot in Midtown Manhattan, with a “Jesus Christ Superstar” billboard on one side and a porn store on the other, is a little surreal, like a portrait of John D. Rockefeller by Magritte. The two pumps, 25 feet tall, materialized this week on a lot at 46th Street and Eighth Avenue where a hotel once stood, now the only remaining patch of undeveloped land in the neighborhood. On Monday the pumps will be activated and — at least if their creator, the German-born artist Josephine Meckseper, has her way — they will cause passers-by to think about a lot more than whether there might actually be black gold coursing beneath the urban bedrock.

“I think of them as a kind of fragment, a glimpse, into what our reality is,” said Ms. Meckseper, 47, whose work often operates at the intersection of culture, consumerism and power. “They are about people struggling to have enough money to pay their heating bills. But they are also about those same people’s desire for entertainment and culture, and about the costs of those things too.”

The sculptures were commissioned by the Art Production Fund, a nonprofit public art organization, as part of its Last Lot program, in collaboration with Sotheby’s, the Times Square Alliance and the Shubert Organization, which owns the chain-link-fenced lot and has donated it temporarily for art projects.

Ms. Meckseper based the electric-powered pumps closely on mid-20th-century models used in Electra, a small town in north Texas once famous as the state’s pump jack capital. And while their red accents and arcing forms inevitably evoke Alexander Calder and Ellsworth Kelly, she said it was important that they were pump jacks first and kinetic sculpture only second.

“The fact that they would really function is very important,” she said, standing in a light rain Wednesday morning on the rough ground where the pumps had been installed.

Until May 6 they will lumber into motion twice a day — four hours in the morning and four in the evening on weekdays; continuously for eight hours on weekends — pumping nothing but conceptual crude while appearing to pump the real thing. They will probably not succeed in drowning out the constant stream of roaring, honking traffic headed east on 46th Street, but they will make the authentic, old-fashioned din of American industry.

“The fabricator asked if I wanted to make them noisier, but I said I didn’t want it to happen artificially,” Ms. Meckseper said. “If they were out here for a few years, they would start to make that horrible screeching noise. It’s a sound that I actually kind of love.”

Six Firms in the Running to Design Cornell's High-Tech School on Roosevelt Island

ArtsBeat - New York Times Blog

February 28, 2012, 12:46 pm

Six Firms in the Running to Design Cornell’s High-Tech School on Roosevelt Island

Rem Koolhaas’s Office for Metropolitan Architecture and Thom Mayne’s Morphosis Architects are among the six firms that Cornell University is considering to design its high-tech graduate school on Roosevelt Island.

The finalists for the engineering and applied science campus, first reported by The Wall Street Journal, also include Skidmore, Owings & Merrill; Diller Scofidio + Renfro; Steven Holl Architects; and Bohlin Cywinski Jackson. Skidmore, which helped Cornell develop its initial proposal, will continue to work on the master plan.

The university expects to select a winner by April and to begin construction in 2015, with a tentative opening date of 2017.

At artsbeat.blogs.nytimes.com

 

Notes from the Bass Museum, Cindy Sherman at MOMA “Since 1977, when Cindy...

“Since 1977, when Cindy Sherman first exhibited her “untitled film Stills” of fictional B-movie starlets, she has surrendered herself to photographic portraits of nearly every female archetype imaginable. So completely does the artist disappear into her subjects—disheveled fashion victims, art-historical icons, tragic dowagers, manic clowns, Beverly Hills housewives—that it’s hard to believe they are all the same woman.” by Linda Yablonsky for the Wall Street Journal (2/26.2012)

Notes from the Bass Museum, Reformed Bad-Girl Artist Tracey Emin

“Emin brought a lot of the bias on herself. When she first rose to notoriety, as part of a group of artists including Damien Hirst, Sarah Lucas, and Jake and Dinos Chapman, who would come to be known as the YBAs (Young British Artists), Emin certainly lived up to her reputation.”

‘Cindy Sherman’ at Museum of Modern Art

PHOTOGRAPHY'S ANGEL PROVOCATEUR

"At many points throughout this dense, often exciting show, which opens on Sunday, we are confronted by an artist with an urgent, singularly personal vision, who for the past 35 years has consistently and provocatively turned photography against itself." By Roberta Smith for the New York Times

Authenticity of several Pollocks and Rothkos challenged in court

Left, the “Elegy” painting that the dealer Julian Weissman bought from Glafira Rosales and sold to an Irish gallery that later demanded its money back; right, Motherwell’s “Spanish Elegy (Alcaraz) XV,” from 1953, which is part of the catalogue raisonné sponsored by the Dedalus Foundation.